Carl Sargeant: I thank the Newport West Member for her question. I have provided £4.4 million of funding this year for county voluntary councils across Wales and to the Wales Council for Voluntary Action to ensure support is available to third sector organisations. This includes support with fundraising, good governance and placing volunteers.
Carl Sargeant: Domestic violence is an epidemic, and I’m not sure—. We’ve just uncovered the top of the iceberg of this, and service delivery is challenged. And I’ve asked my senior adviser, in terms of the domestic violence adviser, which is in the Act, to look at a sustainable funding model and to see if we can work with the sector to deliver better services, longer term. I would like to invest...
Carl Sargeant: And I said that in my previous response. I think there are peak times where sporting events have high pressure for service deliverers, and it’s important for us that we can get a message out to people to say there is a helpline number or a support mechanism in place. But it is something I’m very keen to look at, long term, and I’ve started a discussion with the police and crime...
Carl Sargeant: I thank the Member for his contribution. I think sporting events are one aspect of this. But what is absolutely clear is that there is a direct link between alcohol misuse and domestic violence, and that’s where the link is. Usually, this happens at sporting events, so it’s not exactly the rugby or the football, but it’s the cultural events around those that cause the problems. The...
Carl Sargeant: I thank the Member for his question. The Welsh Government is committed to working with its partners to take every opportunity to tackle domestic violence. Our aim is a more coherent approach to publicity with sustained activity to as wide an audience as possible. As part of this approach, there will be an increased level of social media activity through the Live Fear Free campaign during the...
Carl Sargeant: Well, it’s all our job. Governments can do many things, but telling people to get out on their bike is one thing I’m certainly not about to do. One of the innovations of last year—and some people were highly critical of it—was the Pokémon Go app that was used on many phones. I know many kids didn’t look up from their phones and banged into walls et cetera, but it got people out and...
Carl Sargeant: I agree with the Member, and, as I said to Vikki Howells, I will be seeking a conversation with the Minister responsible for planning to see how we can have a holistic approach to development and estate and look at that for the future.
Carl Sargeant: I thank the Member for his question. Indeed, prior to questions today, I met with StreetGames, who told me about the work that’s going on in many communities around Wales where play is an important factor, not just about health benefits, but also about confidence and other aspects of mental health provision et cetera. There’s a huge benefit from play. We are seeking to use play as an...
Carl Sargeant: I think the Member is absolutely right to raise this issue and she champions the cause of disabled children at every opportunity she has. My officials work across policy areas to ensure that play opportunities are sympathetically and appropriately considered in policy development and delivery. On the back of the play sufficiency assessments, officials are examining how policy areas work with...
Carl Sargeant: I thank the Member for her question. Both Dawn and Lynne and many other Members on the benches beside me have made many references to the future of communities and what that looks like, and rightly so, recognising the strengths within their own communities. Children’s zones are about integration of services and bringing services together. What I can’t commit to is an open cheque book,...
Carl Sargeant: I thank Vikki Howells for her question. We are the first nation to put play on a statutory footing. We require our local authorities, working with partners, to secure, where practicable, play opportunities that meet the needs of all children and young people in their areas. We also provide funding to support this aim.
Carl Sargeant: Indeed, and that’s the principle of this. This is not additional funding. This is about bringing together what we have and a better implementation of this. There are examples of these children’s zones working across the globe and that’s something that we should use in best practice here in Wales too.
Carl Sargeant: The Member is right, and what I don’t want to be in the space of is controlling the market. But I think that we do have to give enablement to organisations to be able to deliver schemes for Welsh Government and for the sector. I meet on a regular basis with the WCVA and I’ve also met with organisations such as Flying Start and Families First in various areas to make sure that we’ve got...
Carl Sargeant: Yes, I’m very happy to have engagement with my teams. As I said, we’ve had a number of applications for the opportunity to run children’s zones across Wales. But I will check with my team whether Jig-So is part of that, and if not, they can have a conversation, of course.
Carl Sargeant: I think there are lots of data out there around pay and pay scales. It is a matter for the employer in terms of how that is given to employees. But employers will not see any closed doors at Welsh Government level in terms of introduction of equal pay.
Carl Sargeant: I thank the Member for Mid and West Wales for his question. A number of organisations have put forward proposals for pilot children’s zones in Wales. I will announce the pilot areas as soon as we have an opportunity to assess the bids received.
Carl Sargeant: I think the Member raises an important issue around making sure that we get equality in job evaluation. It’s something that many in this Chamber, in all parties, have championed for many years. Ensuring that that happens is another thing, but we’ve been blighted by the ambulance chasers on trying to stop equal pay on the basis of people wanting to stop the claims going ahead. And I think...
Carl Sargeant: I agree.
Carl Sargeant: I’m glad the Member and I are clearly coming together on our policies in some areas. [Laughter.] Let’s not be too ambitious. I think the Member’s right to raise the issue of prudent healthcare. Mark Drakeford has been for a long time raising this in the Cabinet setting, and I share his views on this about prevention and early intervention. And that’s why we are tackling issues around...
Carl Sargeant: It really troubles me that we’ve got children living in workless households and living in poverty wherever they live, whether that be in a Communities First area or elsewhere. And it’s not always a class issue—this can happen to any communities and any individual. It is an ambition of this Government to tackle the issue around poverty, and that’s why we are looking at reviewing all of...